Curious to see the differences across the countries.
Finland. Traditionally not a thing at all but each year the commercial aspects creep in more and earlier. Nothing about them can be contextualized further than “it’s an American thing”.
That’s pretty much what’s happening here in Australia. I really only see halloween stuff in stores. I don’t think anyone is buying it
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Where are you located?
Bulgaria
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When i was a kid i had the feeling there was more children running around to get sweets too. Now not so much anymore.
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Not a big thing here in Sweden either, although shops do their best to promote it. It gets a little mixed up with “Allahelgona” (all saints day) which is close. Halloween is on the 31st of Oct iirc, and Allahelgonahelgen is on the first Saturday after the 31st of Oct. On allahelgona you’re supposed to remember your dead, so a lot of people visit graveyards and put our candles. It’s usually very beautiful.
Scotland has a thing called guising, which is like trick or treat but without the trick. You’re supposed to tell a joke or do something entertaining in exchange for the treat. Don’t live there anymore so no idea how much of a thing it is anymore.
Slightly off topic, but why is there no AskEurope instance (is that the right word?) on lemmy yet? Or am I just too incompetent to find it?
There is no such community yet, the current flow of content allows to have both the news and the AskEurope questions here.
You might ask here how the community feels about the idea, that could be a good indication on what to do next
In Norway and it’s definitely becoming more of a thing. Growing up I never did it, but now I run out of lollies because there’s so many kids out and about.
On the flip side, Norway does have their own Halloween style celebration where you go around dressed up and demand lollies from people door to door (julebukk - I’m not sure what the exact date for it is, and I think it varies depending on where you are, but it takes place between boxing day and up to and on new year’s Eve) which I’ve definitely noticed has been declining the last few years. Maybe kids want to celebrate Halloween more than julebukk? Probably because on Halloween you can just, show up and demand shit while on julebukk you actually have to prepare a little song and whatnot.
Shame because like, julebukk is a) actually traditional and b) has some weird ass lore behind it. Like it’s something about appeasing the Christmas goat (who may or may not be a demon saint Nicholas personally went down to hell to beat the shit out of until he agreed to help him)
growing up in former eastern germany we had sankt martin’s day (11. nov) as “laternchen” (small latern). it involves kids going door to door and singing songs in exchange for candy.
when halloween started appearing it was too close in date and too similar but seen as “worse” since the “trick or treat” thing seems more bratty lol
In Germany it’s not a big deal. People have an excuse to get drunk at a Halloween themed party but that’s it.
Hungarian here, and a lot of far-right nationalists hate it, so it de-facto became part of the counter-culture.
What’s their problem with it exactly?
They think it’s an anti-christian holiday, and thanks to recent revisionism, they now think christianity was first practiced by Magyars, thus Halloween=anti-Magyarism.
I’m getting real bored of all these people
thanks to recent revisionism, they now think christianity was first practiced by Magyars
I’d lovw to know the mental gymnastics behind this one.
Hungarian national mysticism, mostly built around the idea of that the Magyars did even less crimes in history than we often dare to admit.
Since a big issue was the genocide of pagans by Stephen I. (to the point barely anything remained of it), a large chunk of it is to rewrite the religion part of our history. Even crazier is that many of them assume we were the Huns too, and since there was some myth that Mary might have been a Hun princess, this also proves Jesus Christ was Magyar himself. It is often paired with the idea that the idea, that the Carpathians are “actually the ancient home of the Magyars, because Huns”, thus denying the genocide of Avars, displacement of Slavs (this is very important, since Slovakia’s territory used to be part of Hungary, and denying the legitimacy of a nation is a good gateway for ethnic cleansing á la Russia), etc.
In (Madrid, at least) Spain, it’s a sorta huge deal in schools, with every kid under 14-15 dressing up, a lot of schools doing costume parades, and many classes giving out candy and watching movies. But outside of school, it’s all but ignored. You’ll see little kids in costumes and a few bar events, but no trick or treating and no decorations.
The much bigger day/event is carnival, for which kids wear costumes again and there’s a big parade in most cities.
Not a big thing in Poland but it’s present. Kids have fun going around their neigbourhood after dark (smaller ones usually under their parents’ watch) hunting for candies, young-to-middle-age people get an excuse to throw a party. It’s mostly a curiosity, not something people wait the whole year for or go out of their way to decorate their house like in the US. I personally don’t enjoy dress-ups but if kids are having fun and the religious people are getting triggered because of a “western, non traditional, pagan custom”, then I’m all for it.
Kids hunting for candies and adults having an excuse to throw parties is the main reason people enjoy Halloween in the US too. Of course, the season of scary is a ton of fun too. It’s the only time of the year that everyone goes all-out with horror movies and haunted houses.
It’s not a thing.
The odd bar or club will have a “halloween” themed evening or something, but that’s all there is.